Symbiotic nitrogen fixation and establishment of six Montana native legumes species

Legume species have been known to increase soil N content and are incorporated into land restoration seed mixes in hopes of improving degraded soils and plant communities. The goals of this project were to determine effects of soil type, soil moisture, inocula and fungicide treatments on legume esta...

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Main Author: Metcalf, Sarah Jean
Language:en
Published: 2005
Online Access:http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2005/metcalf/MetcalfS0805.pdf
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spelling ndltd-MONTSTATE-http---etd.lib.montana.edu-etd-2005-metcalf-MetcalfS0805.pdf2012-03-09T15:49:06Z Symbiotic nitrogen fixation and establishment of six Montana native legumes species Metcalf, Sarah Jean Legume species have been known to increase soil N content and are incorporated into land restoration seed mixes in hopes of improving degraded soils and plant communities. The goals of this project were to determine effects of soil type, soil moisture, inocula and fungicide treatments on legume establishment, Nâ‚‚ fixation capacity and plant biomass for six individual native legume species. In potted greenhouse studies, legumes were grown in five field soils to verify nodulation without inocula. In a second phase, plant biomass was measured in two soils at two moisture contents (60 and 80% of field capacity). The efficacies of Rhizobia inocula and fungicide treatments were also tested. The greenhouse studies were used to supplement data gathered at three field sites around Montana. Native soils contained Rhizobia that were specific to many of the plant species tested and induced nodulation. Soil moisture content, inoculation and fungicide treatments had less effect on nodulation and biomass than the soil characteristics. Fungicide treatments benefited establishment of Lupinus argenteus, and had mixed effects on Astragalus canadensis and Dalea candida. Benefits were dependent on soil nutrient content, microbial biota and other characteristics. Shoot biomass at each field site also varied significantly; in general A. canadensis had the highest nodulation and biomass, while Dalea purpurea and D. candida typically had the lowest biomasses and nodulation. This research should assist land managers in selecting species to suit a wide variety of ecological conditions and land restoration scenarios. 2005-08-15 Thesis Montana State University en http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2005/metcalf/MetcalfS0805.pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description Legume species have been known to increase soil N content and are incorporated into land restoration seed mixes in hopes of improving degraded soils and plant communities. The goals of this project were to determine effects of soil type, soil moisture, inocula and fungicide treatments on legume establishment, Nâ‚‚ fixation capacity and plant biomass for six individual native legume species. In potted greenhouse studies, legumes were grown in five field soils to verify nodulation without inocula. In a second phase, plant biomass was measured in two soils at two moisture contents (60 and 80% of field capacity). The efficacies of Rhizobia inocula and fungicide treatments were also tested. The greenhouse studies were used to supplement data gathered at three field sites around Montana. Native soils contained Rhizobia that were specific to many of the plant species tested and induced nodulation. Soil moisture content, inoculation and fungicide treatments had less effect on nodulation and biomass than the soil characteristics. Fungicide treatments benefited establishment of Lupinus argenteus, and had mixed effects on Astragalus canadensis and Dalea candida. Benefits were dependent on soil nutrient content, microbial biota and other characteristics. Shoot biomass at each field site also varied significantly; in general A. canadensis had the highest nodulation and biomass, while Dalea purpurea and D. candida typically had the lowest biomasses and nodulation. This research should assist land managers in selecting species to suit a wide variety of ecological conditions and land restoration scenarios.
author Metcalf, Sarah Jean
spellingShingle Metcalf, Sarah Jean
Symbiotic nitrogen fixation and establishment of six Montana native legumes species
author_facet Metcalf, Sarah Jean
author_sort Metcalf, Sarah Jean
title Symbiotic nitrogen fixation and establishment of six Montana native legumes species
title_short Symbiotic nitrogen fixation and establishment of six Montana native legumes species
title_full Symbiotic nitrogen fixation and establishment of six Montana native legumes species
title_fullStr Symbiotic nitrogen fixation and establishment of six Montana native legumes species
title_full_unstemmed Symbiotic nitrogen fixation and establishment of six Montana native legumes species
title_sort symbiotic nitrogen fixation and establishment of six montana native legumes species
publishDate 2005
url http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2005/metcalf/MetcalfS0805.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT metcalfsarahjean symbioticnitrogenfixationandestablishmentofsixmontananativelegumesspecies
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